Last week, we discussed the view that the Global War on Terror has lost support because of the Bush Administration's zealousness. This article supports that assumption. It describes the current predicament which 50-year-old Sami al-Arian finds himself in. This Palestinian professor who taught computer science and legally lived in the United States has been arrested and convicted on charges that he aided the US-recognized terrorist organization "Palestinian Islamic Jihad."
Apparently al-Arian and the US government made a deal were he would plead guilty and be deported in exchange for not having to testify in additional cases. However, the government says the latter part was not part of the deal as al-Arian is reporting it to be. His situation is doubly messy because his earlier sentencing to 57 months in prison has recently been fulfilled...but the government still wants to make him testify in additional cases, so Immigration and Customs Enforcement now has custody over him since he can't really be held in prison.
But the real issue that pertains to decreased support for fighting terrorism is the result of 17 accussations about his ties to Palestinian Islamic Jihad. For six months he stood trial for different terrorism-related crimes, but the jury acquitted him on eight counts, and it couldn't reach a consensus on the other nine. Clearly, this didn't make the Administration look good. Instead, it just fed the fire that the Bush Administration is too aggressive and overreaching in its hunting of terrorists, and that it isn't cautious enough--sometimes attempting to convict people of crimes they can't be proven to have committed.
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